Britain's Queen Elizabeth starts 4-day celebration of her 60 years as monarch (photos)

The Associated Press

Published
12:00 am EDT, Saturday, June 2, 2012

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, center, reacts as she looks out from the balcony at the end of the Epsom Derby horse race Saturday at Epsom racecourse England at the start of a four-day Diamond Jubilee celebration to mark the 60th anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II accession to the throne.
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Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, center, reacts as she looks out from the balcony at the end of the Epsom Derby horse race Saturday at Epsom racecourse England at the start of a four-day Diamond Jubilee ... more

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Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, center, reacts as she looks out from the balcony at the end of the Epsom Derby horse race Saturday at Epsom racecourse England at the start of a four-day Diamond Jubilee celebration to mark the 60th anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II accession to the throne.
Associated Press less

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, center, reacts as she looks out from the balcony at the end of the Epsom Derby horse race Saturday at Epsom racecourse England at the start of a four-day Diamond Jubilee ... more

Photo: AP

Britain's Queen Elizabeth starts 4-day celebration of her 60 years as monarch (photos)

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LONDON -- Queen Elizabeth II is off to the races Saturday, at the start of a four-day celebration of her 60 years on the throne.

Later in the weekend she'll make a trip down the River Thames, then take in a concert -- all accompanied by tens of thousands of her subjects, coming out to fete a monarch whose longevity has given her the status of the nation's favorite grandmother.

Later, the 86-year-old monarch will attend the Epsom Derby, one of the year's biggest horse-racing meetings, where she will be driven down the racecourse in an open-topped car before watching the races from the royal box.

The monarch is a racing fan and horse breeder, although unlike many of her subjects she does not gamble.

The queen took the throne in 1952 on the death of her father, King George VI, and most Britons have known no other monarch.

Despite cool, damp weather in much of the country, hundreds of thousands of people are expected to participate in celebrations, including street parties, Sunday's 1,000-boat flotilla down the River Thames and a Monday pop concert in front of Buckingham Palace featuring Elton John and Paul McCartney.

Jubilee events end Tuesday with a religious service at St. Paul's Cathedral, a carriage procession through the streets of London and the queen's appearance with her children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren on the palace balcony.

Prime Minister David Cameron -- the 12th British leader of the queen's reign -- paid tribute to the monarch's "extraordinary level of physical energy, mental energy, and above all devotion to her people, to the institutions of this country, to the way our democracy works."

Not everyone in Britain will be celebrating. The anti-monarchist group Republic plans a riverbank protest as the flotilla goes by on Sunday, followed by a pub night where royal refuseniks can drown their sorrows.

But many Britons seem to be embracing the jubilee spirit -- a tribute to a monarch whose popularity cuts across all ages, social classes and political affiliations.

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